| Literature DB >> 35457637 |
Yung-Chia Hsueh1, Rachel Batchelor2, Margaux Liebmann1, Ashley Dhanani3, Laura Vaughan3, Anne-Kathrin Fett4, Farhana Mann1,5, Alexandra Pitman1,5.
Abstract
Given the links between the built environment and loneliness, there is interest in using place-based approaches (addressing built environment characteristics and related socio-spatial factors) in local communities to tackle loneliness and mental health problems. However, few studies have described the effectiveness, acceptability, or potential harms of such interventions. This review aimed to synthesize the literature describing local community-based interventions that target place-based factors to address loneliness and mental health problems, informing the development of future public health approaches. We searched PsycINFO, Medline, and Embase using a structured search strategy to identify English-language studies evaluating the effectiveness, acceptability, and potential harms of place-based community interventions in addressing loneliness and mental health problems, both in general and clinical populations. Seven studies met the inclusion criteria, classified as evaluating provision of community facilities (such as clubhouses), active engagement in local green spaces, and housing regeneration. None were randomised trials. Quantitative and qualitative findings suggested promising effects and/or acceptability of six interventions, with minimal potential harms. There is a clear need for randomised trials or quasi-experimental studies of place-based interventions to describe their effectiveness in addressing loneliness and mental health problems, as well as complementary qualitative work investigating acceptability. This will inform future policy development.Entities:
Keywords: built environment; community; garden; loneliness; mental health; nature
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35457637 PMCID: PMC9029472 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph19084766
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 4.614
Characteristics and findings of quantitative studies included in review (n = 3).
| Study | Country/Setting | Place-Based Intervention | Theory of Change/Likely Mechanisms | Sample Size and Characteristics | Outcome Measure(s) | Study Design/Statistical Analysis | Key Findings | Potential Harms Identified | Methodological Limitations |
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| Levinger et al., 2020 [ | Australia; Elderly participants recruited from the general community in the suburbs close to the Seniors Exercise Parks in Melbourne, between October 2018 to November 2019 | Seniors Exercise Park program: a 12-week structured supervised physical activity program using an outdoor exercise park, followed by a 6-month unstructured physical activity program (ongoing unsupervised access to the exercise park/twice a week exercise session with no formal structured group activity) | Actively promote community wellbeing through the provision of a unique exercise and social support program in elderly people as well as the effects of sustained engagement in physical activity on physical, mental, social and health outcomes |
95 elderly people (≥60 years) at baseline (mean age 73.0 ± 7.4; 82.1 % female) follow-up data for 80 people to compare pre-post intervention scores (mean age 72.8 ± 7.5; 81.3 %) 58 people took part in 9-month follow up |
Health-related quality of life using EQ-5D-5L/visual analogue scale (VAS); Mental wellbeing using WHO-5 Wellbeing questionnaire; Loneliness using 3-item UCLA Loneliness Scale; Depression using Geriatric Depression Scale (GDS-15); fear of falls using The Short Falls-Physical activity level using Community Healthy Activities Model Program for Seniors (CHAMPS) Physical function using 2-minute walk test; step test; 4 m walk test Falls Efficacy Scale International (Short FES-I) questionnaire; self-efficacy using The Self-Efficacy for Exercise (SEE); enjoyment using Physical Activity Enjoyment Scale (PACES); Social isolation and social support using Lubben Social Network Scale (LSNS6) Fall risk assessment using The Fall Risk for Older People in the Community (FROP-Com) | Pre-post study design
Analysis of variance (ANOVA) repeated measures to compare scores on all measures at baseline and at 9-month follow-up A separate ANOVA repeated measures examine the effect of the exercise program on all outcomes between baseline and 3 months/3 months and 9 months |
Significant increase in physical activity level after the intervention ( Significant improvements in all physical function measures ( No significant changes in socialisation and self-efficacy for exercise outcomes ( EQ-5D-5L: improvements in self-care ( 9 month follow up versus baseline: significant improvements in physical function ( very few changes were observed between 3 and 9 months follow up Improvement in depressive symptoms (Depression domain in Quality of Life Scale and GDS-15) Slight improvement in loneliness but with no changes in social isolation/support (UCLA3/LSNS6 did not suggest experienced severe loneliness or lack of social engagement at baseline) | None |
COVID-19, associated restrictions and lockdown causing smaller sample in 9 months follow up (underestimation) Level of physical activity was measured using self-reported questionnaire (CHAMPS), but has been widely used in research and suited for older Australian Relatively high proportion of females, whereas males have been reported to have specific preferences and characteristic of exercise interventions |
| Wang et al., 2020 [ | China; Elderly participants recruited from villages of Jinhua in Zhejiang, between July and October 2017 | Community canteen services offered to older adults in 7 villages, compared with older adults from 7 closest villages without canteen services. | Recipients of the canteen service (canteen group; CG) would show significantly better health than the non-recipients (NCG) | Final sample size of 284 elderly people responded to the survey comprehensively
140 participants with canteen services, 144 without 148 females (52.1%) Average age 83.07 ± 4.19, with a range of 75 to 98 years |
General mental health using Chinese version of General Health Questionnaire(GHQ-12) Satisfaction with life using Chinese version of Satisfaction with Life Scale (SWLS) Social capital using Social Capital Questionnaire (SCQ) developed by Yang with acceptable reliability and validity Nutritional status using Chinese version of Revised Mini Nutritional Assessment Short-Form (MNA-SF) |
Cross-sectional design Independent Chi-square test and Mann–Whitney test to compare categorical data ANOVA and Fisher’s Least Significant Difference (LSD) test to compare nutritional differences among three groups (CG with government support and enterprise donation; CG with government support only; NCG) |
Adults in the CG had better mental health (mean = 1.39, SD = 1.95) and richer social capital (mean = 17.89, SD = 1.38) than NCG (GHQ: mean = 1.93/SD = 2.36; SCQ: mean = 17.48/SD = 1.64) Nutritional status was not significantly different between CG and NCG, but was significantly different when considering funding sources and daily meal costs: ie those in the CG group with government support and enterprise donation (n = 40) had better nutritional status (mean = 13.28, SD = 1.32) Those in the CG group had higher satisfaction with meals, self-evaluation of the meal nutrition, and regularity of meals compared to NCG No significant differences in age, gender, marital status, educational level, or income between the CG and the NCG. | Not measured |
Cross-sectional study and only evaluated relationships at specific time points Canteen service policies may be different for different provinces and result may not be applicable to poorer regions Not measured confounding factors but only measured the benefits, not what people did not like Self-report bias |
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| Jalaludin et al., 2012 [ | Australia; | Urban renewal program conducted between April 2009 and August 2010, and in the two streets of established social housing
Internal upgrades: internal painting, replacement of kitchens, bathrooms and carpets where required, and general maintenance such as repairing water leakages, faulty windows and doors External upgrades: property painting, new front and back fencing, new carports, letterboxes, concrete driveways, drainage, landscaping and general external maintenance Social interventions: community engagement activities, learning and employment initiatives, and provision of a community meeting place. | The renewal program and its social components were intended to bring about improvement in social capital, social connectedness, a sense of community and in the economic conditions of residents. |
Total 42 participants followed up Only 28 people completed both pre- and post-intervention surveys and were analysed (20 females; 86% aged 18–54 years) |
Psychological distress using Kessler Psychological Distress Scale (K10) Questions about social connectedness, social capital, self-rated health, psychological distress and health risk factors as taken from the New South Wales Population Health Survey Perceptions of neighbourhood safety, aesthetics and access to services within walking distance using the Neighbourhood Environment Walkability Scale (NEWS) Adequate physical activity defined as a total of 150 min per week Hazardous alcohol drinking defined as consumption of more than 2 standard drinks on any one day | Pre-post study design
Only included individuals who completed both surveys Fisher-Freeman-Halton exact test to compare independent proportions Paired chi-square tests (McNemar’s test) to compare paired proportions. | Uncorrected | None | Small sample size No comparison group (to take into account the influence of any changes occurring over that period due to factors other than the program) Short follow-up Results in the specific setting of this social housing neighbourhood may not be generalisable to other settings Not possible to identify the active ingredients of the intervention, i.e., the urban renewal component versus the community engagement initiatives |
SD = standard deviation; CI = confidence interval.
Characteristics and findings of qualitative studies included in review (n = 2).
| Study | Country/Setting | Place-Based Intervention | Theory of Change/Likely Mechanisms | Sample Size and Characteristics | Study Design and Analytic Approach | Key Themes | Potential Harms Identified | Methodological Limitations |
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| Carolan et al., 2011 [ | United States; Participants recruited from a clubhouse in a rural community of a mid-western state | Clubhouse programme intended as a recovery community to foster interpersonal connections and support for individuals with mental illnesses | Based on a trans-ecological model that emphasizes the proximal relationships developed by individuals with persons and aspects of their environment | 20 people (50% female)
Mean age 44 years (between 34 and 60 years of age) 12 schizophrenia, 5 affective disorders Inclusion criteria: members were involved with the clubhouse for at least six months and attended at least three times per week, within the last six months; ability to comprehend the consent process and coherently respond to interview questions to participate in a 60–90 min interview |
Semi-structured, open-ended interviews Data coded using an adapted version of thematic analysis, based on a modified grounded theory approach (deductive and inductive methods) | Two overarching themes:
Clubhouse environment: A place to be/clubhouse structure Opportunities for growth: A place to grow/a place to interact with others/Staff are important | None |
Involved only one clubhouse |
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| Whatley et al., 2015 [ | Australia; Participants recruited from the staff, volunteers, participants, and support workers of a local community garden programme based in an inner city area of Melbourne. | Mind Sprout Supported Community Garden (Sprout): a local voluntary sector program offering 3 days per weeks to participants living in the local area who experienced mental ill-health, supported by staff, volunteers (some of whom had past mental health problems), and support workers from the participants’ mental health teams. The intervention comprised gardening activities, a weekly community kitchen, food enterprises, creative projects group, micro-enterprises, a weekly market, and a monthly community market. | The community garden model aimed to help enable occupational participation and social inclusion for people experiencing mental ill-health |
Observation of 13 study participants (4 staff, 5 project participants with mental health problems, 2 external support workers, 2 volunteers) observed over participant observation period face-to-face interviews with 4 staff and 2 participants with mental ill-health to gain their views on how the intervention might effect change. |
Ethnography as research method, with data collected over the period November 2010 to January 2011 Data included field notes taken during observation, a review of Sprout documentation, face-to-face interviews and photographs of the Sprout space/project. Analysis occurred concurrently with data collection using open and focussed coding of field notes, collected documents and interview transcripts and of memos writing and mind mapping, | Three inter-related themes:
Creating community: community connection as an outcome of participation Sprout: a flexible environment that supports participation Creating a learning environment | It was felt that having responsibility for working on the Sprout market stalls could create anticipatory anxiety for some participants, given the expectation of them running the stall smoothly. However, this seemed to be mitigated through the benefits gained in the social connections forged through the process of running the stall. |
Only a proportion of Sprout members were represented in this study, and the recruitment process was unclear The first author’s role as an employee of Mind Australia may have influenced disclosure the success of the programme in promoting future occupational participation and social inclusion was not explored as this was not part of the aims of the study. |
SD = standard deviation; CI = confidence interval.
Characteristics and findings of mixed methods studies included in review (n = 2).
| Study | Country/Setting | Place-Based Intervention (by Category) | Theory of Change/Likely Mechanisms | Sample Size and Characteristics | Means of Data Collection, Type of Data Collected | Analytic Approach | Key Findings (Effect Sizes, Key Themes, Efforts to Combine Findings from Quantitative and Qualitative Analysis) | Potential Harms Identified | Methodological Limitations |
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| Gerber et al., 2017 [ | United States; Bhutanese refuges recruited from local community garden and Bhutanese community network | Local community gardening at two local community plots. Authors clarified that these were in an urban area, and that some participants had to use the bus to access the gardens, but all were local to residents. |
Gardening can boost connectivity and community strengths particularly for groups highly valuing communal functioning and cohesion Expected outcome: Bhutanese gardeners would self-repot significantly fewer symptoms of distress and perceive higher levels of social support |
50 people (62% female (n = 31)) mean age = 44.5, SD = 15.01 56% non-gardeners (n = 28), 44% gardeners (n = 22) | symptoms of PTSD, anxiety, depression assessed by Refugee Health Screener-15 (RHS-15) in Nepali Perceived social support using Medical Outcomes Study Social Support Survey (MOS SSS) Somatization using the Patient Health Questionnaire-15 (PHQ-15), a 15-item self-report scale of somatization derived from the Patient Health Questionnaire, used previously with refugee populations, and translated into Nepali Functional adaptation using Adapted Client Assessment Tool (ACAT) to describe current mastery or independence in 13 domains of functioning, orally administered | Descriptive analysis of quantitative data. | Quantitative:
RHS indicated that distress was not significantly different between gardeners and nongardeners MOS SSS: gardeners reported greater social support (a moderate to large effect size (d = 0.70; 95% CI 0.12, 1.27), subscales revealed that gardeners reported significantly more tangible social support (large effect size, d = 0.88, 95% CI 0.28, 1.45), medium effect size was observed for emotional/informational social support (d = 0.53, 95% CI −0.04, 1.09), small to medium effect for affectionate support (d = 0.34, 95% CI −0.23, 0.89), and positive social interaction (d = 0.31, 95% CI −0.26, 0.86) PHQ-15 scores found to be not statistically significant but found a small to medium effect size (d = 0.36, 95% CI −0.21, 0.91) with gardeners having more somatic complaints Exploratory correlational analyses: Age was additionally significantly related to perceived emotional/informational social support (r = −0.38, Qualitative: Key themes: General findings (results presented in all, or all but one), typical findings (more than half of the cases), variant findings (2 to 4 cases) | None |
Self-selection to group membership leading to gardeners significantly more likely to live in a house and lower medical bills Randomization of assignments may adversely disruptive to the ethos of the established community Elderly with physical limitations may have difficulty obtaining certain benchmarks Small to moderate effect sizes may be missed, although sample size was sufficient for hypothesis testing Under-reporting of adjustment difficulties as participants feeling discomfort voicing their problems in interviews |
| Chiumento et al., 2018 [ | United Kingdom; Children recruited from 3 schools in the North West of England | Haven Green Space school garden project, | Promote positive mental, emotional and physical wellbeing of the children with the “Five Ways to Wellbeing” framework (Connecting with others; Being active; Taking notice of the local environment and of their feelings; learning horticultural skills and how to manage successes and failure; Giving back to the wider community | 36 children (14 females)
children with behavioural, emotional and social difficulties 2 primary schools (year 5 and 6, aged 9–12) and 1 secondary school (year 7 to 9, aged 12–15) | Mental wellbeing using Wellbeing check cards (based on the 7-item version of the Warwick Edinburgh Mental Wellbeing Sale) enhancing control increasing resilience and community assets participation and social inclusion. | Quantitative analysis: | Quantitative: | None |
Lack of a valid control group and small sample size Lack of validation of Wellbeing check cards in children or of the adaptation of the MWIA for children (in view of its use of adult terminology) Wellbeing check cards: limited in their intended ability to capture change over time |
SD = standard deviation; CI = confidence interval.
Figure 1PRISMA flow diagram describing study selection.
Quality assessment of included studies using MMAT.
| Category of Study Designs | Methodological Quality Criterion | Levinger et al., 2020 | Wang et al., 2020 | Jalaludin et al., 2012 | Carolan et al., 2011 | Whatley et al., 2015 | Gerber 2017 | Chiumento et al., 2018 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Screening questions | S1. Are there clear research questions? | √ | √ | √ | √ | √ | √ | √ |
| S2. Do the collected data allow to address the research questions? | √ | √ | √ | √ | √ | √ | √ | |
| Qualitative studies | 1.1. Is the qualitative approach appropriate to answer the research question? | N/A | N/A | N/A | √ | √ | √ | √ |
| 1.2. Are the qualitative data collection methods adequate to address the research question? | N/A | N/A | N/A | √ | √ | √ | √ | |
| 1.3. Are the findings adequately derived from the data? | N/A | N/A | N/A | √ | √ | √ | √ | |
| 1.4. Is the interpretation of results sufficiently substantiated by data? | N/A | N/A | N/A | √ | √ | √ | √ | |
| 1.5. Is there coherence between qualitative data sources, collection, analysis and interpretation? | N/A | N/A | N/A | √ | √ | √ | √ | |
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| 3.1. Are the participants representative of the target population? | × | √ | √ | N/A | N/A | √ | √ |
| 3.2. Are measurements appropriate regarding both the outcome and intervention (or exposure)? | √ | √ | × | N/A | N/A | √ | × | |
| 3.3. Are there complete outcome data? | √ | √ | √ | N/A | N/A | √ | √ | |
| 3.4. Are the confounders accounted for in the design and analysis? | √ | × | √ | N/A | N/A | √ | × | |
| 3.5. During the study period, is the intervention administered (or exposure occurred) as intended? | √ | √ | √ | N/A | N/A | √ | √ | |
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| 5.1. Is there an adequate rationale for using a mixed method design to address the research question? | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | √ | √ |
| 5.2. Are the different components of the study effectively integrated to answer the research question? | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | √ | √ | |
| 5.3. Are the outputs of the integration of qualitative and quantitative components adequately interpreted? | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | √ | √ | |
| 5.4. Are divergences and inconsistencies between quantitative and qualitative results adequately addressed? | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | √ | √ | |
| 5.5. Do the different components of the study adhere to the quality criteria of each tradition of the methods involved? | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | √ | × | |
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| 80% | 80% | 80% | 100% | 100% | 100% | 60% |
For mixed methods studies, the overall score was denoted as the lowest score awarded to any of the components of the mixed methods study (whether quantitative or qualitative) as per precedent, on the basis that the combined quality cannot be said to surpass the weakest quality component [51].